Evening Star Newspaper, August 22, 1930, Page 3

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A ‘mlton No. 1 I-m n‘l.:‘ 2227 Tv-mlahug\ufl (D. C. Property Only) 6% No Commission Charged You can take 12 years to pay off your loans without the expense of renewing. $1.000 for $10 per month, including | interest and principal. Larger or smaller loans at proportion- ate rates. erpetual Building Association Established 1881 Largest in Washington Assets Over $23,000,000 Cor. 11th and E N.W. JAMES BEERY, Presi EDWARD C. BALTZ, Secretar; Sturtevant Blowers For Burning Buckwheat Coal Fries, Beall & Sharp 734 10th St. N.W. NA. 1964 SAVE EXPENSIVE | CLEANSING BILLS Annette's Perfect Cleanser -vlmy removes all food, frutt Leaves no odor, , grease, al beverage stains, It's 8 Por der—not & liquid. does not affect color—Cannot Leave 3 | and Drug Stores, S0c. Free rile, Aunette's, Boston, um“ ~—before you com- plete arrangements for Packing, Mov- ing and Shipping your household ef- fects. Y For 100% satis- factory service, you'll find M. T. & S. Prices Notably Moderate. Phone Nat'l 6900 CALLS ON HOOVER Faag Has Fed Many Presi- dents—Says McKinley Easiest to Please. By the Associated Press. Edward 8. Faag, who says he has ifed every President since Grant, with the exception of Wilson and Harding, today added to his treasury of memories il |a sympathetic nod of recognition from President Hoover, ‘The white-haired hotel steward ealled the White House yesterday and won a broad smile from the Chief Executive lll | by \recalling the President's concern over food for Herbert, jr., one day about 20 years ago in San Jose, Calif. Leaving the Executive Mansion, Faag commented on the famous men he had served: “McKinley was the easiest to please, the most delicate about his eating; Roosevelt was the hardest to feed. Says Coolidge Minced. “Coolidge minced,” Frag said, adding, “A light euer nmfighr "m e Coming from Vi Nm ola for Pmlde'nt ;uoueedmum,‘ hrut'!emn“ ld not lace his ler. 's face b “Don’t you remember that day in San Jose when you came out to ask me about the little fellow’s food?” the steward asked the President. President Hoover did. He and Mrs. | Hoover had_stopped en route to Palo |Alto. Mr. Hoover had gone into the dining room to satisty himself that his son’s food was healthful. The steward had reassured him. left the executive office ction. about Mr. Hoflz;l"l th had served at different hotels, the stew- ?' mention especially McKinley and McKinley Loved Huckleberry Pie. “Many & huckleberry ple I sent to President McKinley; he loved it. Gl ‘The nzwu'd served this President on Lake . Once Teddy Roosevelt, then Oovemor of New York, was at the same hotel “Taft u more than any man I ever fed,” said the steward, “and was frank and Jovltl about. it.” He recalled that when Taft wemu:o JOBS ARE OFFERED THE ~EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. VETERAN STEWARD | IN NEW YORK JUDICIAL INQUIRY I e has ordered a State investigation of charges that New York Gov. Roosevelt City Ml[lltnte George F. E bench. He placed Attorney d (left) paid $1 eral Hamilton 0 for his appointment to the d (upper right) in charge of inquiry and instructed Justice Philip J. McCook (lower rllht) 1o convene special lem of State Supreme Court to consider case. SIX BODIES SOUGHT IN'SHIP WRECKAGE Commodore Henry Douglas King, M. P., Among Victims of British Coast Gale. By_the Associated Press. FOWEY, England, August 22.—A ‘mass of shattered wool and metal, which & violet ses in Lantivet Bay today. Although a part of the wreckage was cast ashore, none of the six bodies of those who lost their lives aboard her has been recovered. The six known to have been aboard when the ship crashed on the rocks ‘Wednesday night are Comm IN COTTON FIELDS ot sericc Hundreds Declared Needed in Southern Georgia to Handle Crop. ATLANTA, Ga. August 33—South — and Southwest '10-DAY EXCURSION to Western North Carolina (Vacationland ) SATURDAY AUGUST 30th, 1930 ' VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY Round Trip Fare Washington to Asheville, $14 Proportionate Fares to Other “'Western North Carolina Resorts Tlckeu honored on all regular s leaving Washington Au- sts 30th, except CRESCENT IMITED; - tickets good in Pullman cars upon payment of regular Pullman fares. Next Back-Home Excursion October 4th oo tckets, ote., T Phones “Natt 146568, Union Station, or Union Station, Alexandris, Va. SPECIAL NOTICES. loss contracted by my H REDDING, National n-u Blde. L {OT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY 3’; 'fi&z' SR LY | o off solution for Gmh'a play er & ‘unem] fo. ment -lmuon. oommblhner of undred:o(men.henld.nren-mfl in the belt where cotton is opening rap- idly and somewhat btm-turely lue to : ,‘,”"‘ ‘weaf and light n.ln- all. One fa 3 , in g thing amn pick-~ called for aid in ers at once, another has asked for $100 d ha smaller ve asked . for or eight men were wait- ing at his office when he arrived yester- day morning, and he dispatched them by truck to the sections where pickers are need “Others,” ‘Talmi said, “might profit by their example.” OESTERREICH JURY TO HEAR ARGUMENTS Woman Charged With Husband's Murder Testifies Crime Was Committed by Sanhuber. | By the Associated Press. 1 trial hund.mc murdering her Oencneu:h, before the jury begins its deliberations. Mrs. Oesterreic] with Otto Sanhuber, her admitted lover, whom she secreted in ‘attics for 10 years. Sanhuber, tflod' -wlu;"l, Oesterreich, testifying in her fense, accused Sanhuber of slaying her = “UKULELE IK.E" RESISTS oNl: JOB 18 TO MOV] E YOUR r.lre. (Contideration a 000 To% Cost 39 oF miles. ‘I‘QIT us Tmotor No. “A-1obd0n il be je _and_ repair ‘?g‘,n 17" st nows The | PAY lotor A frew FOR BATE-UPRIGHT FIAND, R 43, 1o vag sicrace &m %%flx'n——ma %‘%h A“n.n the r eowm- umu nlnu.‘r:m- ehlluhfl UITABLE FOR WED- Fepureh, Pe; Jfestivals. & nu"!"ro ul chairs 0% e ik 3 tric Corner 10th & fable for wien 3 u’? E‘Tmn.é i lfirlbuux e o ot! th nother Winter wi BILRLRE L S ln?n sl B W. District 0933 Printing Gafumen A are at your service for result-getting pubhc:ty ‘The National Cnp!ul TEMPORARY ALIMONY Declares Estranged Wife Given $150,000 in Property Settlement. Divorce Trial Is Pending. f | By the Associated Press. ‘LOS ANGELES, August 22.—Clff Ed- wards, known on the screen and stage as “Ukulele Ike,” was in court yester- d.ywmvuuuwhyhemuldnot y his estranged wife, Irene Edwards, $250 weekly alimony pending trial of her divorce suit. Edwards resisted ent, he said, ,nn the ground he had given his wife more than $150,000 in a property set- tlement a year ago. “I haven't a thing left in the world {but my old uke’ Edwards the ais, | judge. “Tll play her a tune on wthat 1t you want me to. -Will Rogers TAHOETAVERN, Calif.—We are up here at this beautiful lake, near | ‘% 12 D 8t N.W fi “Colum! u' ud Press Photo. STATE EWALD QUIZ FORMALLY PENED Special Grand Jury to Probe Charge Magistrate Bought Job. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, August 22.—Attorney General Hamilton Ward formally opened today the State's investigation into the charge that George F. Ewald paid $12,000 for his appointment to & city magistrate’s bench in 1927. ‘The attorney general was first to ap- ¥ur in the Supreme Court to arrange Gov. ald inquiry out of nu dmrlet af Crain, who failed mln any i.ndlct ments after presenfln( tho case to & county grand jury, co-operation in the suu'- invelull“on. Ward said. He ph.nmd to confer Another eontzrence ‘was on the attor- ney general’s schedule, one with U States Attorney Tuttle, whose re tions in a mail fraud case brought th oflnr::l bench-buying charge 'l\ltll' is continuing hh | of the case by fi'fl in- d, | Federal grand jury and Tuttle has peti~ lives were COAL WAGON PURSUIT OF HUSBAND ENDED Mother of Eight Lands Man and Woman in Jail After Pitts h was indicted jointly | Mrs. Kiger mmwerehmmm-hauoefl Kiger and Mrs. Bessle Roberts in a tioned a Federal Oourt order dlnctlnc their testimony. All three testified be: fore the county grand Jury U. S. STEAMER DISABLED 400 MILES OFF COAST Export Ship Breaks Down in New- foundland Waters—Crew and Passengers Not Endangered. By the associated Press. NEW YORllfmAlllun 23.—The Ameri- es C., CARIBBEAN RULE BY .. ADVOCATED Admiral Hussey Tells Wil- liamstown Institute of Na- val Defense “Key.” By the Associated Press. ‘WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass., August 22. —Independent control of the Caribbean ares by the United States was advocated by Rear Admiral Charles L. Hussey, U. 8. N, retired, at the general con- ference on the defensive aspects of the Caribbean area at the Institute of Poli? tics today. ‘The United States should co-of IE with the rest of the world in the bean, he said, but should retain * greatest freedom of action in mdgpend- ent control of that area,” which he termed the “key to our naval defense and our economic welfare.” ‘The’strategy of the Caribbean centers in the control nfuul’lnmnc 1, he said, and 1t calls for oo nce.” He declared the Canal “would be a disaster second only to invasion of the continental United States.” Good From Interventions. Admiral Hussey said interve the United States in wg‘ - should be judged by the good they have accom) and mt “solely by the re- hm of inter- iversity of nu- ent Amerlxenn Wucy“!n the Caribl for one of “consultative” or co-opera- tive lnwrvelmon “We cannot bidding the l’uropeln powers to inter- vene while we intervene as often as we wish wtthout consulting anybody but ourselves,” he sald. He denled that the Monroe Doctrine is justification for in- tervention in Latin American affairs or that protection of the Panama Canal can be pleaded as justification for in- tervention. Should Abandon Stand. ‘““The United States,” he said, “should abandon its present attitude wmd the P'lln amendment, which was designed |lve it a lenl H(he'!n Inumne in indej denoe of ."” The nutrumsnt. he added, hl! been interpreted to justify intervention in domestic affairs of cuh “when neither the independence of a country nor the adequacy of its xnvm- ment were even remotely invol FRIDAY, AUGUST ' 22, 1930. Crooning Melodies And Flowing Skirts ¢ Bring Bnek the Waltz RICH lUMBERMAN DIES IN HERMITAGE Charles F. Ruggles, 84, Pic- turesque Figure of North- ern Michigan. on indefinitely for- | his ago homes he remllned behind, living as he always had lived, wearing moccasins and a lumberjack shirt, with no necktie beneath his long white beard. Florida, Cllflumh—cnd much of the huge estate he left behind is repre- sented in these holdings. Ruggles was born in sanm I(e on March 3, 1846. His parents k him to Oshkosh, Wis, where he wm-ked in a match factory 4 a youth. The family moved to Manistee Ariur 3, Hegburn et of | 1 staff of the United States Fleet, ex- R‘hl.lld the part played he llld, Xlu In ation of “security of the Panama in its nm.\onlhmuou de- mtucuflty.hcnld “has & upon the fu- mh. ey o( limitation of arma- ments,” especially upon_tonnages and ratios in both oceans. The Canal is 8 delicate mechanism, he said, and “could be by & successful on a very small scale.” fense.” rather % CUBANS PROTEST REVISION OF COURT +| Twofold Objection Reported gto League of Nations . Proposal. By the Associated Pross. GENEVA, August 33—The Cuban yesterday reported to the of Nations :g twofold objection law.” hckp:(' & complete number of uonl by lmru:nolg’cuamt no -ratifying governmen nonn M objection of the Cuban mvo%'f.mcut'h protoeol for e not likely to'be declared in force. GIVEN,‘LIFE SENTENCES FOR SLAYING SHERIFF Three Involved in Murder Said to Have Been Due to Rigid Pro- hibition Enforcement. ¢ | By the Associated Press. nature of break down. DEFEAT COST $21,000 LINCOLN, Nebr., A 22 ~W. M. Stebbins, State uu“:\‘::r mee-l- 01 t.he funds lvlllhblt for his con- test, 817,068 was I rooming house, pollea sald, and the Nebraska friends, !ubblnl himself giv- three were arrested. ing $5,910. JACK ZUTA'S CAREER IN CHICAGO RACKETS WAS UNSPECTACULAR of Hoodlums Rose|He, From Unknown Beginning to Czar of Powerful Mob. Most Unobstrusive By the Associated Press. CHICAGO, August 22..— Biographers of Jack Zuta, slain vice lord whose balance checks have stirred Chicago, will find less material than investiga- tors turned up in hil strong boxes. Zuta's ctacular. There is no reeora of his ings. In ulahn'unmnln‘ saloon on the West Side, 'hich was frequented by & gang of neighborhood. In began a quiet invasion of the vice world of the West Side, then under the control of De Pike” Heitler and ‘“Monkey Genker. Had Business Ability. ‘The invasion was followed by a bomb war. But Heitler and Genker, the Lombardo in 1928, and once Investiga- tor Pat Roche of the State's attorney’s office made the threat: Kept Out of Jail. “I'll put Jack Zuta in jail as soon as I find him,” but Zuta kept clear of the \r?a".h the West Side profits Zuta.en- tel a wmblnnbn with “Billy” Skid- , Barney Bertsche and Jugs” uonnwmkhl:uzgmloop But the story goes in ‘his. deal and emerged $200,000 “broke.” Then an opportunity lrue ‘The Moran and Alello gangs on the North Side rieeded just such a “thinker,” with & capacity for filing systems and books. In a short time Zuta rose 1 known to the “cknowledged csar of the powerful North Side mob, Capone's chief In a general round-up, murder of Alfred "J&ka" Hnlh. Chl the | cago Tribune repnmr. Zuta was brought ln‘llnur years finally drove the master During those prosperous years JIA:k Zuta's name virtually was unknown to Chicagoans. _Business-like, he sat :lhuloop “real estate m"—ke:ph( e with a record of never hav- Once | sung at ‘his into the police station to answer ques- tions. It was his last public -ppanr ance in Chicago. He was mowed down by machine guns at a lake resort in Wisconsin a few days later. i’uneul. month late: nle‘ty de'polh it SAYRE, Okla, August 323 —Frank , Beckham Coun ho was all to "~ “mfllflnc enforce- tion la TWO HELD IN SLAYING OF GAME WARDEN Shooting of Officer Baid to Have Been the Result of Old Trouble between Emory and the war- den, officers said, ago, when man J. J. Neely Im Hyatt for illegal fishing vm.h a seine. Hyatt was convicted and sent to the chain gang for two years and was released only threemonthsago. Train Travel Cost Reduced Nearly 50% From Washington to all points South. Limited 15 days and 30 days. Tickets Sold each Friday, Saturday and Sunday During” August Atlantic Coast Line Railroad F. E. Masi, D. P. A. Phone Natl. 7838 A48 H St NW, 1g | June Blossom, debutante, who years, Manistee was startled last Winter by a break be- tween the two men which came to light ina llllt for $5,000,000 against the old man filed by Rademaker. The case was tledn!terthe-wryo(f.hc long re- lationship been told in court. Property rlxhu in muny joint enter- prises were upnn After that Ruggles carried on with his salt business, apparently as vigorous as &t any time in the nearly 70 years he e strangs Jlite he 1ed aia st le he not pre- vent Ruggles from taking an interest in the affairs of the world n large. ’rwn years ago it was reveal letter from the late Uhlat Justice 'fl- liam Howard Taft that Ruggles in 1912 provided funds to otrnua and g’ port the American Judiciary Soclety an efl«t to help “prevent delays of the Two doctors and four employes were e nthooldmnamvhnnhem Shortly before he had funeral be hel & mausoleum beside the bodies of his father and mother. Studies Part for Shubert Play. NEW YORK, August 22 ( -~ Miss ing ”m- Betty Gerard at N is part. ere for a play in which vtll - She has the ol “Young !Innm THOMPSONS D THOMP » | Prague Theater Decause the youth | b bon unum DESERYVES MCORMICK LIQUOR STAND IS IN DOUBT Chicago Convention Dele- gates Fighting Hard for Wet Plank. By the Associated Press. SPRING arm.nmA 22.~The w'.)lo- P‘ L] ?ggfii'éa § i | il Mrs, MeCormick. r'§ gdd nif 3.1 £ f ¥ ‘ifig S‘:r): prepnrte,d munm m‘;“fl.h‘:” KING CAROL BURLESQUE IS HALTED BY MINISTER Musical . Play Shows Amorous Resort Adven- tures of “King of Montania.” By the Associated Press. mavl Aunm 22—A munul mnhvudu:%yumdl a mmmnmm:’-td Thz la; o lnll,m 1yu ‘was onufled xu Imnt.y "Klnl Carol the 23d of llonhnh." 'n:e in the play, has countless amor- | ous. adventures at & resort. ‘The Rumanian found that hero “bears an unmistakable lke- IL” The director mwm‘r VERA CRUZ FEARS RUIN FROM NATIONAL ABUSES By the Associated Press. MEXI in a dissolution of | v, 1331 G St. N.W. SAFET}" OR -SAVINGS “,‘nnm\ wdl 1y} e chtit Lldigol Combination!! Chevrolet S-E-R-V-I-CE i )i 1 i i i ALWAYS OPEN CHEVROLET SALES CO, 610 H St. NE. Ph. Line. 10200 b o M1LK Is Nature's Createst Contribution to Health MILK From Thompson's 100% Model Dairy Plant s Milk at lts Very Best

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